Gaea takes the gods and goddesses of myth and brings them under the creation and dominion of the one, true God.

Gaea, the earth goddess, Mother Nature herself, is frustrated with humankind’s wanton use of the earth’s natural resources and utter disregard for the other creatures of this world. She wants to punish the humans for not respecting creation as they should and begins visiting other deities, asking for their help in her campaign against humankind. The question is, how far will God let her go? And will humans ever really change their ways?

Gaea is both humorous and spiritually insightful. Robina Williams shows us a great picture of God and provides a strong presentation of the Gospel message.

The one problem I found with the book was its slow-moving plot. The narration becomes very repetitive as we are told over and over again how Gaea feels versus how God feels. Many of the conversations and scenes continue well beyond the point of providing new information.

Overall, I give Gaea a recommendation of Good and will look forward to reading the rest of Robina Williams’ Quantum Cat series, of which Gaea is the third.

An alien ship has crash-landed on Earth, setting off a new wave of drug addiction and world war in its wake, while the sole survivor of the wreckage vows revenge against the god-like authorities of his home planet. At the same time, the new president of the GenRes Company is obsessed with living up to his father’s medical success and has just discovered how to transform normal children into Genetically Altered super-humans. Who will control these children? The scientist, the alien, and a couple of ambitious criminals are all eager to keep them for their own use. But Someone else has entirely different plans for them. Follow as each development merges together and a new breed of adolescent superheroes rises to the forefront in book one of The Gifted: In the Beginning.